I was stationed at AFIP from 1986-91. I was in the Immuno lab. I thought I was doing "imunos" when I was stationed in San Antonio, TX (remember the Dako kits?) I wasn't even close to the things that AFIP was doing. We were making our own rabbit antibodies. Made up our own link and label from scratch. Our DAB was order in 5gm powder bottles and we had to prep it under the fume hood in full PPE. I really learned about immunos there. Even tried a new method using a lead-based solution in a microwave to open up binding sites in FFPE tissue. Worked with a new automated immuno stainer from Fisher. Think it was called the "Brigoti" machine.
I learned  a lot there, but was ecstatic to return to San Antonio.

Joe
----- Original Message ----- From: <cedarwo...@comcast.net>
To: <histonet@lists.utsouthwestern.edu>
Sent: Friday, September 09, 2011 10:04 PM
Subject: [Histonet] AFIP closing





Hi Histonetters, especially Joyce as it seems we may be the 'same vintage' - but I have to chime in as an old-timer and say how sad I am too about the AFIP. My histology career essentially started there. I was fortunate enough to have been trained there in Lee Luna's time, and knew the folks who literally "wrote the book" (you all know which one I mean, I'm sure, the Histo Bible). I was also at Walter Reed hospital - which also closed just in the past few days - which was then housed within the AFIP building, on the same floor actually. It sure makes me feel both blessed for such excellent training and at the same time "outmoded" for these institutions to be gone. There is little to add after that, but I enjoy reading the posts on Histonet just the same.

Brigit in CA
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